September 2005

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Ever heard of a cultural universal? In other words they are things that people all do; no matter the location, the complexity of the culture, its material culture, etc. In other words, dancing, singing, eating; may all be called cultural universals. Its an interesting cultural and anthropological framework that no matter how diverse or different, we all seem to tred the same places, living the same lives, eating and drinking and dancing and singing. With all of the other complexity foisted on us by the ‘net, the technology, the world; we still hearken back to simpler things. One that is interesting in the link above is religion. Give it some thought and here is an anthropological perspective for you. As cultures grew in complexity, new institutions were needed. These institutions had to manage the access to things like food, water, crafts, etc. Perhaps they were educational and military and cooperative institutions. But they definitely were religious. People that were hunter-gatherers found enough mystery in weather, ground, ecology without adding pestilence, insects that ate crops, etc. Religion as an institution, a cultural universal, had to evolve to meet the needs of the burgeoning society. So in essence cultural universals are not static. They must be able to adapt and adopt. They are evolutionary perspectives and I suspect when one no longer “fit the bill” they were tossed aside much like some of our outmoded social mores.

When I was doing cultural anthropology in New Mexico, I found another one. Humor. We had a new ethnologist on board. He was asking this one senior puebloan questions about a place of power. The elder documented all this stuff and the ethnologist was busy writing. An hour went by and the ethnologist was all excited and wanted one of us ruffians to take him out there.

At the end, the elder looked at the guy with some humorous glint in his eye. He basically said,

You know all that great stuff I just told ya? It was all bullshit

I just stopped and started laughing. It was the essence of this particular cultural universal. Humor.

Sometimes we just move too fast to catch all of the things in our culture and our universals just cannot keep up. We lose sight of the forest and know not of the trees either. We are simply aimless beings spinning around too tightly in our orbits. Then we believe that our orbits are all of reality. Edward Abbey never saw any underlying reality and I doubt it really exists besides in our own superficial orbits. But our worlds are not the sum-total of the cultural universals. Other live other ways.

We all can learn every new universals, adopt old ones. Its a wondrous thing. I seriously doubt that technology by itself could ever be a universal. It has to have a human touch to apply it. Don’t they all need human interaction to make them work though? Especially humor. A good joke is nothing if you have no one to tell it to.

I’ve been a Debianer over the long haul. I started somewhere back when still at Linuxcare when I got oh so tired of SuSE and RedHat. What got me then was this issue I had with rpm-hell. Here is how it went and perhaps it was on SuSE something that came with like 9000 CDs for an install. Probably before the easy DVD installs of these days. I wanted to upgrade Gnome on SuSE because that was what a person is supposed to do. But there were two tracks of rpm packages. There were some that another SuSE’r had made and then there were SuSE’s. The ones from SuSE were woefully old and since I liked the bleeding edge I wanted newer packages. I downloaded and installed the other set. Suddenly I had dependency resolution hell. There was a minor variance in this rather significant package called libGTK which caused all sorts of issues. It was like a minor number off or something but the applications all wanted something else. Geez. I fumed over it for awhile and was told to move to RedHat something. RedHat something has always been my downfall. I seem able to screw up a RedHat install very quickly just by not wanting all the crud they put in for a console-based server. Like why do I need X this and that anyways? For a server? Why do I need X at all? Why do I have to do a custom install to get rid of X? Questions that finally drove me away. At that point I was the Director of Linuxcare Labs so I enforced a debian standard on everyone; even the lab server. The lab server was a Dell PowerEdge 2450 and it ran Debian potato or whatever like a champ. Soon the other “lab rats” were running debian as well. One friend, Greg Kurtzer, based his Chaos distribution in part on his debian experiences or so he tells me.

But the real thing that became easy is that I stopped having that certain kind of Hell. I had a few other kinds of minor hells but I solved them all. One time, libpam managed to get seriously foobared in unstable and root logins would not work. My buddy DK was doing a install for a newbie and decided to do the “apt-get dist-upgrade” from a stable system. He got the borked libpam0g. Then to show off the power of Debian he did su and it would not work. We all broke down laughing in IRC that night but luckily many of us had root shells/terminals open and we left them that way. I also had sudo installed which is very nice. Always put sudo on things but guard its permissions in the /etc/sudoers file.

The lesson I learned over my long haul is that Debian simply rules. It does all the stuff I need with dependency resolution and even if it shows me some fire and brimstone on occasion, I still would choose it over anything else. Its just that much better. I’m always amazed by its demographics and the quality job its developers do building packages, making the distribution a thing of distinction, etc. Moving between versions has never really caused me problems but others seem to have had issues. For awhile, it was difficult to move from stable to unstable but now its easy.

If you want the easy road to Debian life, paved with small downloads of net installers; take the new sarge net installer and do it! Get yourself a 2.6 kernel though and the hardware support will shine!

Its debian after all…

Being there

The washing machine is poking along this morning and I’m watching KRON-4 morning news. Its quiet here now because both kids and the wife seem to be gone. I’ve always thought that a person needs those moments of time when he is alone but not lonely. The difference is like a canyon really. Often enforced solitude drives people to illness, obsession, and disaffection. But as the coin turns, people need those moments of solitude chosen. We all walk twin paths or so and I’ve seen this a lot of late. There is the person we want to be and the person we really are. I think the Japanese say that we are actually 3 people. No wonder we are split like Sybil. Our very lives are split into the people we think we are, the people others see, and the people we really are. Its a terrible crisis of conscience. I’ve had the fortune (and misfortune) to work around people that cannot seem to ever display the truth except when it somehow benefits them. Their “truth” is a hidden value that only comes out to show at various moments. After some years of working around this, I think I am about ready to declare enough!

Now I have this opportunity to declare myself and I can truly “be there”. Being there means I am not a spectator any longer and I can find the thing of value that somehow I have missed until now. We all need to feel that there is a challenge out there that we can surmount.

Ahh!! The washing machine is stopping its characteristic spin and roll. Its time to take on another task. Its time to once again drop the facade and be there. Being there has its value and I think after months of working 14 to 16 hours per day I have this freedom now to look around and see where I am now. I also see the terrible truth of how I spent my last years.

I moved the blog, duh…

Everything has its time to change and I got tired of the same ole, same ole mt. Now I got da mighty, powerful, semantic weblogging platform.

The er, uhm, yikes… GAP

Many folks have pointed at discrepancies of Linux here and there especially on the Desktop. It has challenges there still. Asa on his weblog detailed a few of them around integration, etc. There are others. One I would call communication. I think the major modus with Linux is a separate and good tool for each job and the tools may not or will not talk a common language. This breaks many user’s expectations of a desktop that is united in how it deals with process communications between programs. Perhaps Evolution as a mail client has addressed this most significantly; but the desktop itself still isolates its components to some degree and we get a set of separate and unique tools that each have man pages that really don’t tell a user how to fulfill the needs. If you want people to use Linux and they are people that have not, man pages and their terse and almost senseless communication is gonna have to change.

The second level of communication which suffers is between old and new users of the OS. What formats and formulats do people use these days to communicate? I think its still an online experience vested in the growth of forums, usenet, IRC, and even IM. They all correspond to communication needs whether its one on one, one to many, many to many, many to one. Perhaps the crowning glory are mailing lists and how certain mailing lists gateway themselves to usenet.

I think this creates a technological impasse or gap for users that want to find either an integrated solution or integrated use case scenaro but are faced instead with multiple layers of one to many or many to one communication. What I have seen on usenet is, don’t come here saying you are a noob. Read the man pages dood. Don’t ask stupid questions cause we ain’t got no time and we’ll just ignore you. So much for patient communication. But the real gap here is do we want new people to use Linux? Do we want them to bring their own perspectives and feelings and views and thereby make Linux into yet another new (gnu) thing?

The little and big answer is we need to close the gap or at least address it.

Is it just my imagination or are there more so-called tools over in linux land?  I was messing around yet again on my debian mail server playing with some basic procmail recipes (I really like that things that make mail disappear are called recipes).  On IRC one of our favorite little debian tools is this speculative and imaginative program called "cowsay".  Lets ee if it will transpose correctly from a xterm here…

  ____________________
< I love movabletype >
 ——————–
        \   ^__^
         \  (oo)\_______
            (__)\       )\/\
                ||—-w |
                ||     ||

I guess it does :)

Anyways you get the idea about what cowsay does.  You can enter text after calling the program and it faithfully draws a cow on the screen with the words you have typed in.  But that’s not all.  It does a whole bunch more and if you have debian just do an "apt-get install cowsay" and see for yourself! 

 

Traveling Forward

One has to always move forward I believe. Taking steps sideways or backwards gets a person nowhere. I always have to feel that the blog is a journey of self-discovery and nothing more or less. Sometimes with work and play and family pressures one feels that forward movement is blocked. It really is not and I think one can find the things that make them feel that way and remove them. I don’t have a a “rant” or a “tirade” this morning to roll out. Its more a case of empathy for people I have worked with and those that in some capacity I still do. Simply put, I feel sorry for you guys and you know who you are. You’ll find soon enough that the thing you thought was real is really just a image and that’s gonna shock ya. But I think by then I will have traveled forward to yet other sunrises and planetary scapes.

I had the opportunity this weekend to give a great deal of thought (some alcohol induced) to the current situation. I don’t remember the last time I could do that or wanted to.

I have the desire to move forward and not take any side steps because when one does that she loses sight of the real progress. Its not really about work any more. Its about the things I do that I find value in. A thing of value can arrive with little or no monetary renumeration and you do the thing because it has other merits. Other things become less than valuable and they are associated with larger amount of cash back; but you make the same value decision but in reverse to recolor your world and leave that part out.

If you, gentle reader, find yourself in the same positions, ask yourself the leading questions.

Is it worth my while?
Should I be doing this given the other things I want to do?
Does it give me that feeling of value?

If you answer no to any of these, then why the fuck do it? Be the judge of yourself. If you find value and you don’t make a world of cash, why do you continue? Is it because the less cash is offset by the true value? One has to reach out to reach in. Study the realities and get back to me. You guys out there and you know who you are, you’ll do that too. But I have this feeling I’ll be elsewhere by then finding a new value.

Sometimes the movement shakes ya and sometimes it plain does not. Bowie said it best about ch, ch, changes.

Hang in there, and I’ll write the true blog entry for today and back date it :)

You heard it here! and perhaps other places as well. People like me weblog for a variety of reasons but most of all as I think I said before it catharctic. Its a release. The stats here kinda demonstrate this as well. People at various places along the comet blog because it makes them feel better. They may blog to tell family and folks they are fine or not. A few may blog to become blogging superheroes or write explosive blogs about political corruption. Why you may read another blog is pretty interesting as well. But the article says the primary reason is not to find out the so-called inside scandal or read how authoritarian the other blogger is and that he must have the right stuff. Nope. Bzzzt. Its for entertainment :)
Now the deep question is why. What makes it a emotional and psychological release? For the millions of bloggers that don’t know what an atom or RSS is or care to find out, its not about silly syndication. Its about personal exploration. So those millions don’t really care if they are linked here or here. Its more of a personal revelation than in and out links.

We can all reach out and reach in; but for millions of us that is all that matters. All the blogging services may provide insight; but they don’t really manage or deliver what we really need.

I’ve been an avid book reader for quite some time and one of the more enjoyable weblogs I read is by an author. Vikk always whets my appetite for my own reading. My reading seems to include a lot of historic fiction these days and some pretty good action thrillers from James Rollins. I like his style and sense of impact, suspense, and the rather international scope of things. The historic novels I really enjoy are those issued by Gary Jennings like Aztec, Journeyer and others. He has this grand scope but he also talks in earthy tones about life low and high. I’ve left a few of his books wishing for more; but the greatest shopping in any number of rings for this stuff has to be Amazon. I just find so much there that i need to read.

My son on the other hand cannot seem to be bothered by most reading. When I was 14, it was like my escape, my travel, my mysticism. He seems to like the more 3d computer and PlayStation gaming releases. Perhaps its just me overall and reading is not a skill that is transmitted genetically :). Its a learned thing and people pick it up, dust it off, taste it at different points in their lives. Often a book to me is a cherished release and if I read about intrepid archeologists or paleontologists I get this sense of life past.

Being a good book reader I think must be different than merely being a reader. One has to revel in its intricacy, find its message or just let the pages be steps that allow an escape. Sometimes writing a weblog entry has that same almost mystical quality. It used to be blogging over on TypePad I felt compelled to write things of quality; these days I find myself waiting and watching silently for the kids to quiet themselves down so I can consider the array of my messages.

Then I can decide for my own release that there is a book, there is a blog to read. I don’t need the movies most times. I can enjoy the book.

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